Dvaipāyana–Kīṭa Saṃvāda: Karmic Memory, Fear of Death, and Embodied Pleasure
यथा नागपदे<न्यानि पदानि पदगामिनाम् | सर्वाण्येवापिधीयन्ते पदजातानि कौज्जरे
yathā nāgapade 'nyāni padāni padagāminām | sarvāṇy evāpidhīyante padajātāni kauñjare ||
毗湿摩说道:“正如在象的足迹之中,一切足行众生的踪迹都被包容并覆盖;同样,其余诸义也都汇聚于此处所宣说的至上原则之中。”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse uses a simile to express comprehensiveness: as an elephant’s footprint can contain the smaller tracks of other animals, so one supreme dharmic principle or virtue can encompass and subsume many subsidiary duties and virtues.
Bhīṣma continues his instruction in the Anuśāsana Parva, illustrating his point with a vivid natural image—an elephant’s footprint—to show how multiple teachings or duties are gathered under a single overarching ethical principle.